skip to main | skip to sidebar

IBTimes-India-speedchange

  • Home

    Monday, November 24, 2008

    Christmas Shopping, Part 2 - Under $100

    Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook


    Christmas Shopping, Part 1

    Suppose you can spend a bit more than the "under $40 (or free)" gifts I suggested in the first Holiday Gifts post, what kind of "gifts of access" could you bring down the chimney?

    (1) Great headsets: These matter. They support Speech Recognition, and if comfortable, help with text-to-speech. I love this one (priced here) from LTB, but other choices abound, such as this Plantronics behind the head model, this one from Logitech, or this very cool one from Creative. Pick what's comfortable, what's cool, whatever, but get a noise cancelling mic, and be sure it is a USB headset, that's always best for Speech Recognition. Anyway, $40 to $90 in the United States.

    (2) The Gift of Jott and/or SpinVox: A friend of mine said, "Of course Jott is worth paying for." And if it helps, then, why not? For $3.95 per month, or, well, you can go up to $12.95/month or buy minute packs, you give the gift of speech-to-text conversion and safety on the road, the ability to remind yourself of things or take notes - and much, much more. SpinVox, which does "the opposite" - converts your voicemail into text. I pay $5.00 per month on Alltel.

    (3) A Canon LiDE scanner with OmniPageLE: Convert any text into readable digital text with these cheap ($50 to $100) "backpackable" scanners which don't even need to be plugged into an electrical outlet (powered by USB alone). They come with a great "light" version of OmniPage that is one of the best optical character recognition (OCR) systems available.

    (4) The "Personal Version" of NaturalReader: NaturalReader is a fabulous free product, but for $50 you get to add instant mp3 conversion, reading within Word and PowerPoint, and two AT+T Natural Voices. If voice quality and ease of use matters, it's only $50.

    (5) A ScanR subscription: ScanR converts photographed documents (or whiteboards) from your 2 megapixel or better mobile phone camera, into readable digital text. You can use it a few times a month for free, but for $3 or ₤2.50 a month you can use it all you want.


    (6) Alternative Mice: Fix those dexterity or stamina issues. How about 3M's Renaissance Mouse for $55. Or a Logitech Trackball ($50 to $70). Or the wireless Mouse Pen ($56). Or the BIGtrack Ball ($79 or $99).

    (7) Alternative Keyboards: So many choices to make computer users more comfortable (and don't forget the free Click-N-Type On-screen version, a perfect match with the Renaissance Mouse), but for $50 you can have a Dvorak keyboard. For ₤25 (UK only) you can have an ABC keyboard. For $60 you can have a Microsoft Wireless Ergonomic Keyboard with built-in magnifier.

    (8) Skype Subscription: Keep people in touch, and think about combining Skype with hands-free control in Windows Vista. You could help un-isolate a person. Add a webcam and let people see for themselves.

    (9) Under $100 mp3 Players: Sure iPods are cool, they're also expensive. How about a Sansa Fuze for $80? Or a Zen Stone for $40. Either will hold a lot of books, which, if you want to buy, you can buy if you can't find everything you want for free.

    (10) An unlimited texting plan for a mobile phone: For $60 to $100 a year you can give the gift of texting, and all it can accomplish in alternative communication.

    but you could also buy five copies of The Drool Room and pass them out to friends.

    - Ira Socol

    Note: Lon Thornburg is collecting Christmas AT Gift Ideas at his AT Blog Carnival - for last minute shopping (December 15) release.

    Posted by Unknown Tanggal 4:17 AM
    Kategori Christmas, gifts, special needs, udl. universal design

    No comments:

    Post a Comment

    Newer Post Older Post Home
    Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular posts

  • Summarizing Grit: The Abundance Narratives
    Procter&Gamble has the tagline very wrong, but their Olympics ads explain what is crucially wrong with the argument espoused by those w...
  • Changing Gears 2012: maths are creative, maths are not arithmetic
    (1) ending required sameness     (2) rejecting the flipped classroom      (3) re-thinking rigor      (4) its not about 1:1       (5) start ...
  • To discuss in class this week
    There are two big things going on in the world this week, one fifty years old, one absolutely current, which should keep your students talki...
  • Walter Cronkite and "the way it [was]"
    Would Walter Cronkite be happy with the way Walter Cronkite's death has been reported? And what does that say about the way in which we ...
  • Who's Behind the Curtain?
    I ended up in two big educational debates this past week. One was about "clickers" - those "Classroom Response Systems" ...
  • The Freedom Stick and "Massive Resistance"
    In 1994 the United States government added the requirement to "Section 504" 1 that all schools (primary, secondary, post-second...
  • What's Free?
    A conversation on the SpeEdChange list (see right column) asked about free solutions. So lets go public with this. This is important because...
  • Stop asking questions if you know the answer
    I was working on a lesson with sixth graders and middle school teachers in doing math without any tools, just in your head. Not memorizatio...
  • Back to the Future
    “It’s just like living in a village, where it’s actually hard to lie because everybody knows the truth already,” Tufekci said [ Zeynep Tufek...
  • Cognitive Change
    "Here’s what I think: learning styles may exist (although the studies that show that they do are generally specious), but they’re large...

Blogger templates

Blogger news

Blogroll


Copyright 2012 - IBTimes-India-speedchange by Yang Penting Share
☝